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- RTB VI Agenda
- Faculty
- Location
- Registration
- CEU's
- Contact Us
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This year, the gathering will take the shape of a gender-responsive treatment consensus-building summit. It will be a joint review of what is currently used in terms of gender-sensitive treatment, what the evidence-based approaches are, and how to ensure that we are implementing the best practices.
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AGENDA
(Subject to Change) |
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Thursday
April 17, 2008 |
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Friday
April 18, 2008 |
| 7:30 |
Breakfast |
7:30
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Breakfast |
| 8:00 |
Registration
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8:30 |
Review of Day 1
— Tom Powers
— Wendy Still
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| 8:30 |
Opening and Welcome
— Kathy Jett
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9:00 |
Report Outs |
| 9:00 |
Overview of existing female offenders programs at CDCR
— Tom Powers
— Wendy Still
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10:15 |
Break |
| 10:00 |
Break
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10:30 |
Report Outs (cont) |
| 10:15 |
Research and Clinical Panel
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12:00 |
Lunch |
| 12:00 |
Lunch
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1:00 |
Research and Clinical Panel Discussion
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| 1:00 |
Administrative and Clinical Panel
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2:30 |
Consensus building |
| 3:00 |
Break
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4:00 |
Day Ends |
| 3:15 |
Evidenced Based Practice
— Stephanie Covington, Ph.D
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| 3:30 |
Small Group Discussion
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| 4:30 |
Final Comments
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Barbara E. Bloom, Ph.D.
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Barbara E. Bloom, Ph.D. is an Associate Professor in the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice Studies at Sonoma State University. She is the Co-Director (with Dr. Stephanie Covington) of the Center for Gender and Justice. Her research and policy interests include women and girls under criminal justice supervision and gender-responsive interventions and services. Dr. Bloom has directed various research projects focused on gender-responsive services for women and girls in criminal justice settings.
Dr. Bloom is a past President of the Western Society of Criminology (WSC) and a recipient of the 2003 WSC Fellow Award for important contributions to the field of criminology. She is a recipient (along with Dr. Barbara Owen and Dr. Stephanie Covington) of the American Probation and Parole Association 2003 University of Cincinnati Award for the publication, Gender Responsive Strategies: Research Practice and Guiding Principles for Women Offenders. She was also honored (along with Barbara Owen) by the American Society of Criminology Division on Women and Crime with the 2006 Saltzman Award for Contributions to Practice which recognizes a criminologist whose professional accomplishments have increased the quality of justice and the level of safety for women.
The National Council on Crime & Delinquency chose Dr. Bloom to receive the Donald Cressey Award for 2007. This award recognizes individuals who have made outstanding academic contributions to criminology, promoting programs that are fair, humane, effective, and economically sound.
Dr. Bloom is one of 15 experts contributing to the recently published California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation Expert Panel on Adult Offender and Recidivism Reduction Programming Report to the California State Legislature: A Roadmap for Effective Offender Programming in California and she is serving on the Governor’s Rehabilitation Strike Team. |
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George De Leon, Ph.D.
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George De Leon, Ph.D., is an internationally recognized expert in the treatment of substance abuse, and acknowledged as the leading authority on treatment and research in therapeutic communities. He holds a Ph.D. Degree in psychology from Columbia University. He is founder and former Director of the Center for Therapeutic Community Research, established by a National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) funded grant to the National Development and Research Institutes, Inc. (NDRI). He is a Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at New York University School of Medicine where he provides training in therapeutic community practice and research to psychiatric fellows, psychologists, pre- and post-doctoral graduates, nurses and social workers. He was a Vice President and Director of Research and Evaluation at Phoenix House from its inception through 1988, and served as Director of Research and Training at Therapeutic Communities of America (TCA) from 1988 to 1991. He served as coordinator of the TCA subcommittee on Criminal Justice on developing the national standards for accreditation of therapeutic community programs in correctional settings.
He has published over 165 scientific papers and chapters, has authored and edited seven books and monographs including The Therapeutic Community: Theory, Model and Method, considered the definitive text in the field. He serves as consulting editor, guest and contributing editor to several national and international journals.
Dr. De Leon is a recipient of several awards including: the Therapeutic Communities of America award for Distinguished Service (1978); the Eugenia Maria De Hostos and Jose Marti award for dedication and contribution to the field of psychology presented by the New York Society of Clinical Psychologists (1984); the award for Distinguished Service to Psychology (1990) presented by the Society of Psychologists in Addictive Behaviors (SPAB); the 1993 National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) Pacesetter Award for Outstanding Leadership in Pioneering Research on the Therapeutic Community Approach to Drug Abuse Treatment; the New York State Governor’s Lifetime Achievement Award (2000); The European Federation of Therapeutic Communities (EFTC) Award for Distinguished Contribution to Science and Practice (2005). |
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Vitka Eisen, M.S.W., Ed.D.
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Vitka Eisen, M.S.W., Ed.D., is the Chief Operating Officer for Walden House Inc., a behavioral health services organization serving over 26,000 individuals and families throughout California each year. She has over 19 years experience in the human services field and a lifelong commitment to supporting people and communities struggling with addiction and incarceration. Dr. Eisen is a Walden House graduate, “Class of `87.” |
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Christine Grella, Ph.D.
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Christine E. Grella, Ph.D., is a Research Psychologist at the Integrated Substance Abuse Programs (ISAP) at the University of California, Los Angeles. Her research focuses on the intersection of multiple service delivery systems, including substance abuse treatment, mental health, child welfare, health services, HIV services, and criminal justice, and the relationship of service delivery to treatment outcomes. She has published her work widely in the areas of addiction, mental health, health services, and evaluation research. She is currently Principal Investigator on several studies, including a long-term (25 year) follow-up study of gender differences among opiate users; the evaluation of an aftercare re-entry program for substance-abusing women offenders; a study of the relationship between drug treatment and child welfare outcomes; and evaluations of several enhanced treatment interventions, including for adolescents, for homeless individuals with co-occurring disorders, and for pregnant and parenting women. |
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Kathy Jett
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Kathy Jett was appointed as Undersecretary of Programs for the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation by Governor Schwarzenegger in September 2007. In this new role, Kathy is responsible for evaluating existing education, training, and substance abuse programs; restoring rehabilitation program services to inmates and parolees in order to improve public safety; designing facilities to best accommodate programs; and working with communities to continue services and surveillance in local settings. In May 2007, the Governor appointed Kathy as Chair of the Governor’s Rehabilitation Strike Team to reform California’s prison rehabilitation programs and expedite implementation of Assembly Bill 900, the historic measure to help reform California’s overburdened correctional system.
Before her appointment to the Governor’s Rehabilitation Strike Team, Kathy was appointed by the Governor as Director of the Division of Addiction and Recovery Services in the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. The Office of Substance Abuse Programs was renamed to the Division of Addiction and Recovery Services when addiction and recovery services were consolidated and elevated within the Agency to have the same emphasis as Institutions and Parole. Kathy was responsible for making substance abuse treatment the cornerstone of the Agency’s rehabilitation efforts and assist in a major focus of prison reform – reducing recidivism.
Ms. Jett served as director of the California Department of Alcohol and Drug Programs (ADP) between November 2000 and February 2007. She lead the State’s efforts to prevent and treat alcohol and other drug problems, managing a state and federal budget of $600 million and overseeing treatment services for over 225,000 admissions annually. While at ADP, Jett administered the voter approved Proposition 36 program through a diverse collaboration of treatment, law enforcement and criminal justice leaders. The program has graduated over 80,000 participants in its first five years. An advocate for drug education and treatment, she spearheaded the California Methamphetamine Initiative. This campaign includes a first ever treatment guide for counselors, public awareness campaigns and private sector support.
Kathy brings a unique perspective from her background and experience in both criminal justice and public health. Prior to her current position, she was appointed Director of the Attorney General’s Crime and Violence Prevention Center in May 1999. In this role, Kathy assisted the Attorney General in advocating effective crime prevention policies and strategies. During her term with the Attorney General’s Office, Kathy launched California Safe from the Start, a comprehensive strategy to bring community leaders from throughout the State together to address the impact of violence on children.
For more than three years, Kathy also served as Chief of the State’s first Office of Women’s Health, which was established in the California Department of Health Services. She was instrumental in increasing awareness of the importance of women’s health to lawmakers and community leaders by developing and coordinating effective policy strategies.
Kathy began her career as a counselor in an adolescent alcohol and other drug program in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. She joined state service in 1977 working as an analyst for ADP. |
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Kay M. Johnson, LICSW
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Kay M. Johnson, LICSW, has 20 years experience as a director, supervisor, clinician, and consultant/trainer in outpatient and residential substance abuse and mental health programs. She specializes in treating people with trauma and addiction. She currently works at St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital Crime Victims Treatment Center in New York City. She is a senior associate for Lisa M. Najavits, PhD of Harvard Medical School/McLean Hospital and is currently working with her part-time as Project Director of a “Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and Pathological Gambling” research grant. For the past ten years she has used Seeking Safety Therapy for PTSD and Substance Abuse in both outpatient and residential treatment settings. She has presented workshops and staff training on for the past six years in the United States and Canada on PTSD, addiction, and Seeking Safety. |
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Patricia H. Judd, Ph.D.
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Patricia Hoffman Judd, Ph.D., is a Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at UCSD School of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry and Director of the Center for Study of Personality and Co-occurring Disorders which includes the UCSD Co-occurring Disorders Program and the UCSD Borderline Personality Disorder Service. Dr. Judd is also Director of UCSD Outpatient Psychiatric Services clinical training program for marriage and family therapists, psychologists and social workers and is Director of the UCSD Attachment Institute. She received her PhD in Clinical Psychology from the California School of Professional Psychology, San Diego in 1989 and her Masters in Social Work from San Diego State University in 1970.
Dr. Judd has two primary research areas: Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) and Co-Occurring Disorders (COD) (substance abuse and other mental disorders). She has studied neurocognitive functioning in BPD patients and has formulated an integrated developmental model of the disorder. Dr. Judd studies the effectiveness of integrated treatment of COD in improving patient outcomes and decreasing public health and criminal justice costs.
Dr. Judd provides individual and couples psychotherapy. She works with individuals with a wide range of psychological and interpersonal problems using an integrative approach. |
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Kevin Knight, Ph.D.
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Kevin Knight, Ph.D. is the Associate Director for Criminal Justice Studies at the Institute of Behavioral Research (IBR) at Texas Christian University. In addition to co-editing two books titled Treating Addicted Offenders: A Continuum of Effective Practices (Vols. I and II), he has published several articles that center on evaluating substance abuse treatment process and outcomes, as well as on the development of evaluation systems for correctional settings. Dr. Knight currently is serving as the Southwest Research Center Principal Investigator on the Criminal Justice Drug Abuse Treatment Studies (CJDATS) project, a large NIDA-funded cooperative agreement designed to improve correctional treatment. He has worked closely with criminal justice agencies and data systems at national, state and regional levels in the US. Dr. Knight also serves on journal editorial boards, including serving as co-editor of Offender Substance Abuse Report, and participates in advisory activities for a variety of organizations that address substance abuse and related policy issues. |
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Igor Koutsenok, MD, MA
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Igor Koutsenok, MD, MS, is Director of the Center for Criminality & Addiction Research, Training & Application and Associate Professor of Psychiatry at the UCSD School of Medicine. He joined UCSD in 1997. His responsibilities include substance abuse and addictions treatment curriculum development and training for a large variety of professionals. He graduated a medical doctor in 1982 from the Medical University in Kiev (Ukraine).
He has a degree as a psychiatrist from the Medical University in Sofia (Bulgaria), 1990, and a Masters Degree in Addictive Behavior from the University of London (UK), 1995. Before joining UCSD, he worked in Bulgaria as the head of the National Center for Addictions and Deputy Director of the Institute of Psychology. During the last 15 years, he served as an expert for many international organizations such as the Council of Europe, the European Union, and the United Nations. He has been invited as guest speaker to numerous conferences and professional gatherings in more than 15 countries. He is the author and co-author of over 30 scientific publications and 4 book chapters. |
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Sheryl Pimlott Kubiak, Ph.D.
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Sheryl Pimlott Kubiak, Ph.D. is an Assistant Professor in the College of Social Science at Michigan State University. Dr. Kubiak is a graduate of the psychology program at the University of Michigan and NIMH pre-doctoral fellow in gender and mental health. Her research interests are at the intersections of criminal justice, mental health and substance abuse – encompassing both individual as well as systems issues. Dr. Kubiak has examined the implications of cumulative stress, PTSD and depression among women convicted of drug offenses; assessed the implications of welfare reform on those with drug convictions; analyzed the effects of PTSD on incarcerated men and women; evaluated PTSD and depression in women victimized during incarceration; and is currently testing a brief mental health screening measure for use in a large metropolitan jail. Dr. Kubiak is particularly committed to the well being of women involved in the criminal justice system and has extensive practice, policy and research experience in this area, presenting nationally and internationally on related issues. In May 2006 she was part of a three-member panel, organized by the Consortium of Social Science Organizations (COSSA) that participated in a Congressional Briefing on Capital Hill focused on women in the criminal justice system. She has been a consultant for federal, state and local entities interested in improving service delivery for those with substance abuse and/or mental health disorders – particularly those within the criminal justice system. Current projects include: 1) assessing the effect of funding source on service delivery, 2) evaluating a state wide effort to implement Integrated Dual Diagnosis Treatment (IDDT), 3) measuring traversing between the county jail and mental health services for persons with serious mental illness, 4) developing screening instruments and assessing mental health for women in the Wayne County Jail. Previous to her academic career, Dr. Kubiak lead a statewide collaboration that was successful in obtaining federal demonstration funding to provide alternatives to pregnant women in the criminal justice system. After obtaining the grant she spent 6 years as an administrator of a community based agency that exclusively served women involved in the criminal justice system. |
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Cassandra Loch, M. A.
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Cassandra Loch M. A. is President & Chief Executive Officer for PROTOTYPES, Centers for Innovation in Health, Mental Health, and Social Services. Prior to assuming this role, Ms. Loch oversaw program operations for PROTOTYPES as the Chief Program Officer. PROTOTYPES provides treatment services in the areas of mental health, substance abuse, trauma, health issues, domestic violence, and reentry and prevention, outreach, and education services to women, children and families. PROTOTYPES also provides training, technical assistance, consultation and research. With a 20 million dollar budget and nearly 300 staff members, PROTOTYPES serves over 15,000 high risk women and families each year. Ms. Loch oversees all aspects of the agency.
Ms. Loch came to PROTOTYPES with an extensive background in both the clinical and management sides of the mental health, substance abuse and health care systems and included senior-level positions in some of the nation’s largest health care organizations. Prior to PROTOTYPES, Ms. Loch was the Vice President of Intake for in-bound call centers for United Behavioral Health where she oversaw the program design for clinical intake for all members accessing mental health, substance abuse and EAP services. Here, she managed approximately 350 employees and a $20 million operating budget. In addition, she was responsible for the successful implementation of a call center technology across nine call centers.
She also served as Vice President and Chief of Staff for the Chairman and CEO of PacifiCare Health Systems. PacifiCare Health Systems was one of the nation’s largest consumer health organizations with approximately $11 billion in annual revenues. Here, she was responsible for facilitating decision making and managing the design and execution of business priorities for the Office of the Chairman. She worked across several business units and corporate functions to ensure consistency in communications and adherence to policy. Ms. Loch started her career with PacifiCare as a licensed care manager for PacifiCare Behavioral Health. As she became increasingly involved in key initiatives, she moved into an operations management where she managed customer service and clinical staff.
Prior to joining PacifiCare, Ms Loch worked for Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, CA, providing psychosocial consultation for the Center for Liver Disease and Transplantation. She was an active participant on the Multi-disciplinary Patient Selection Committee and Co-Organizer of the National Conference for National Association for Liver Transplant Social Workers. Earlier in her career, she served as an Oncology Social Worker at Providence St. Joseph Medical Center- Burbank, CA, providing clinical evaluations, leading / developing cancer support groups, writing for a cancer support newsletter, and training oncology volunteers. She is also an experienced crisis intervention social worker and has provided trauma related counseling for various emergency rooms throughout Los Angeles, including the trauma center at UCLA Medical Center.
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Nena P. Messina, Ph.D.
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Nena P. Messina, Ph.D., is a Criminologist at UCLA Integrated Substance Abuse Programs and has been involved in substance abuse research for over twelve years. Dr. Messina’s areas of expertise include the association between crime, psychiatric disorders, and substance abuse, and the specialized treatment needs of drug-dependent women offenders. Recently, Dr. Messina was appointed as a Special Consultant to act as a Governor’s Rehabilitation Strike Team Member. To create a strategic plan to reform the California prison system in response to Legislative bill AB 900 - The Public Safety & Offender Rehabilitation Services Act of 2007. Dr. Messina has also focused her efforts toward identifying the long-term outcomes of drug-exposed children. Dr. Messina is currently the Principal Investigator of the Children Exposed to Methamphetamine Use and Manufacture Study, a two-year pilot study to assess the medical, developmental, and placement outcomes of children removed from methamphetamine labs in Los Angeles County. Dr. Messina is also the PI of several NIDA-funded grants assessing the effectiveness of gender-responsive treatment for women offenders (on parole, in prison, or under community supervision such as drug court and Prop 36). Dr. Messina has collaborated on numerous publications on the psychosocial correlates of substance abuse treatment outcomes and has contributed a great deal to the understanding of co-occurring disorders, specifically Antisocial Personality Disorder and treatment responsivity for women offenders. |
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Suzanne Ostermann
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Suzanne Ostermann has worked in the substance abuse treatment field for twenty-five years. She has specialized in the issues of under-served and dis-enfranchised populations, with a particular emphasis on women, and women in the criminal justice system. Her work has included the establishment and management of community-based and in-custody programs, service as a trainer and advocate, and innovative program development and application. She is currently the Director of Adult Services for Phoenix Houses of California, responsible for the oversight of community and in-custody services for both women and men. |
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Lynn Pimentel, M. A., is the Clinical Services Director and is responsible for providing and overseeing clinical services for women in the residential perinatal programs (M’ella and the Family Foundations Program). Prior to taking over as Clinical Director, she was the Director of Women and Children’s Residential Programs for WestCare California.
Ms. Pimentel earned a B. A. in Social Welfare from California State University in Fresno, California, and a Master of Arts Degree in Rehabilitation Counseling from California State University in Sacramento. She has been a Certified Rehabilitation Counselor for 36 years, is a Registered Addiction Specialist, and a Certified Covington Curriculum Trainer through CAARR. She has conducted numerous trainings for staff in Covington’s curriculums, including Helping Women Recover and Beyond Trauma. She was instrumental in the development of a Master Treatment Plan for Gender Relevant Services for the County of Fresno, in conjunction with Dr. Stephanie Covington. She is a member of the National Rehabilitation Counseling Association and the Central California Rehabilitation Association.
Her past experience includes working at the Department of Rehabilitation as a Vocational Counselor and Rehabilitation Supervisor. At the Division of Industrial Accidents Ms. Pimentel was an Administrative Hearing Officer, reviewing medical files and rendering decisions on Worker’s Compensation Appeals. From 1985-1990 she was the Clinical Director/Owner of Pimentel and Associates in San Jose, a company that provided services to disabled adults, including controlled substance addicts. From 1990-2002 Ms. Pimentel was employed by Vocational Management Services in Fresno as a Vocational Counselor, Vocational Evaluator, and Program Coordinator where she developed a program to enable female clients to break their cycle of dependence on welfare and developed and implemented a curriculum for a social living model program for the disabled. |
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Vicki S. Redding, M. A., MFT
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Vicki Redding, M. A., MFT, has over 15 years of successful management and supervisory experience in providing gender specific services and working with vulnerable populations. She is an Associate Vice President with Mental Health Systems, Inc., and currently oversees the implementation of SASCA (Substance Abuse Services Coordination Agency) for San Diego, Imperial, Riverside, San Bernardino and Orange County. SASCA works in collaboration with the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, Division of Addiction and Recovery Services, the Parole Department, and Community Based Providers in these counties to line up aftercare services for inmates and parolees to help with their successful re-entry back into their community.
Vicki was part of the initial development in San Diego County of WINGS (Working to Insure and Nurture Girls Success), a gender responsive program, to target adolescent probation females using a strength based, wrap-around, case management approach to service delivery. She has extensive history of working with at-risk youth as well as sexual abuse and domestic violence survivors. Vicki is also a MINT certified trainer. Ms. Redding has a Master of Arts degree in Counselor Psychology, and is a licensed Marriage and Family Therapist. |
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Joe Stommel
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Joe Stommel has spent 30 years in the field of community and corrections mental health and substance abuse treatment. For the past 15 years, he has been Administrator of Alcohol and Drug Services for the Department of Corrections and now is Chief of Rehabilitation Programs including Substance Abuse and Sex Offender Treatment.
He has specialized in the development of in-prison therapeutic community (TC) and parole transition programs. Mr. Stommel has provided extensive training in TCs, TASC programs, and co-occurring disorders. He has assisted in research and coauthored papers and presentations in these areas. |
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Harry K. Wexler, Ph.D.
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Harry K. Wexler, Ph.D., is a Senior Principal Investigator in the Center for the Integration of Research & Practice at the National Developmental Institutes, Inc. (NDRI). During the last 40 years Dr. Wexler achieved a national reputation in the areas of substance abuse policy, treatment and research. His research has had considerable impact on the field and been influential in efforts to expand prison drug treatment by state and federal policy makers. Dr. Wexler currently serves as PI for the Criminal Justice Drug Abuse Treatment Studies (CJ-DATS), a multi-site cooperative research program testing treatment models for incarcerated offenders with substance use disorders, including treatment in jail or prison and treatment as part of re-entry into the community. Dr. Wexler has also done significant work in the areas of HIV/AIDS prevention, gender treatment issues, stigma reduction and co-occurring disorders among offenders, has served as the Co-Chair of the recently released CSAT TIP “Substance Abuse Treatment for Adults in the Criminal Justice System” and has recently served as a member of the Governor's Strike Team to help reform the California correctional system. |
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Location & Lodging |
The Westin Horton Plaza San Diego
910 Broadway Circle · San Diego, California 92101
Phone: (619) 239-2200
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San Diego is a destination that offers a variety of activities fo your personal renewal—and The Westin Horton Plaza San Diego, is conveniently located in a place where you can get the most out of it. A short walk takes you to the heart of the Gaslamp Quarter, featuring some of the city's premiere restaurants and shops. Then branch out and discover the rest of this beautiful city with clear, sunny weather that's sure to charm.
Most any activity you can dream of, from the exhileratingly physical to the refined and cultural, is just a short drive—or walk—away. So whether it's retail therapy at Horton Plaza Shopping Center, playing golf at one of the world's premier courses, sailing on San Diego Bay or wine tasing in the Temecula Valley, the city's many facets offer a place where you can escape, energize and discover. |
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HOTEL REGISTRATION DEADLINE: APRIL 1, 2008 |
| Mention Raising The Bar to get the discounted rate of $110.00 |
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Continuing Education Units (CEUs)
Attendees have an opportunity to earn 12 continuing education units (CEUs) for the full conference. To be eligible for CEU credit, please select the appropriate fee below. (This amount is in addition to your registration fee.) Attendees must sign the attendance sheets daily. |
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| APA |
| The UCSD Department of Psychiatry is approved by the American Psychological Association Sponsor Approval System to provide continuing education for psychologists. This course has been approved for 12 continuing education hours. The UCSD Department of Psychiatry maintains sole responsibility for this course. Please sign the attendance sheets at the registration desk daily. You will need to provide your license number. |
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| CA BBS |
| The UCSD Department of Psychiatry is approved by the California Board of Behavioral Sciences (BBS) to provide continuing education for those holding MFCC and LCSW’s. This course meets the educational requirements for up to 12 hours. Please sign the attendance sheets at the registration desk daily. You will need to provide your license number. |
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| CAADE |
| SCI can account for 12 continuing education units (CEUs) for the California Association of Alcoholism and Drug Educators (CAADE). Please sign the attendance sheets at the registration desk daily. You will need to provide your certificate number. |
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| CAADAC |
| SCI can account for 12 continuing education units (CEUs) for the California Association of Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Counselors (CAADAC). Please sign the attendance sheets at the registration desk daily. You will need to provide your certificate number. |
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| CAARR - CAS |
| SCI can account for 12 continuing education units (CEUs) for the California Association of Addiction Recovery Resources (CAARR), Certified Alcohol and other drug Specialist (CAS). Please sign the attendance sheets at the registration desk daily. You will need to provide your certificate number. |
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| FACT |
| SCI can account for 12 continuing education units (CEUs) for the Forensic Addictions Corrections Treatment (FACT) Counselors. Please sign the attendance sheets at the registration desk daily. You will need to provide your certificate number. |
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| Mail: |
University of California, San Diego
Attn: Susan Timothy
565 Pearl Street, Suite 306
La Jolla, CA 92037
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| Phone: |
858.551.6775 |
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| Fax: |
858.551.2948 |
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| Email: |
rtb@ucsd.edu |
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